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By Eliza Bielak
Bacterial Genomics and Epidemiology, DTU-Food [email protected]
Supervised by Henrik Hasman, PhD
1. Introduction to plasmid biology
2. Plasmid encoded resistance to β- lactams (basic theories)
3. Projects I work with
4. Characterization of resistance plasmids –overview of methods
5. Discussion/ Questions
Plasmid- usually circular, double stranded DNA molecule found in diverse
bacteria
Plasmids replicate autonomously from bacterial chromosome
The minimal region required for replication and maintenance is termed basic
replicon
In nature replication occurs only in the cytoplasm of bacterium
Plasmids tend to have modular compositions
References:
Carattoli,A., 2011. Plasmids in Gram negatives: Molecular typing of resistance plasmids. Int. J. Med. Microbiol..
REPLICON Subunits i) initiation of replication ii) control of replication + PARTITIONING / STABLE INHERITANCE MODULE
TRANSFER REGION Subunits i) Mating pair formation (genes
encoding ’the channel’ ) ii) Coupling protein unit iii) Relaxases (enzymes ’processing’
the plasmid DNA in conjugation)
ACCESSORY FUNCTIONS REGION i) Resistance genes (antibiotics, heavy metals, disinfectants etc.) ii) Colicins (bacteriocins) production iii) Degradation of various compounds iv) Virulence functions
REPLICON defines plasmid ’species’ Classification to incompatibility groups
TRANSFER REGION Classification based on the relaxases (key enzymes participating in conjugation)
ACCESSORY FUNCTIONS REGION Classification based on function conferred by the plasmid -R- plasmids - Col plasmids -Degradative plasmids -Virulence plasmids
References:
Carattoli,A., Bertini,A., Villa,L., Falbo,V., Hopkins,K.L., Threlfall,E.J., 2005. Identification of plasmids by PCR-based replicon typing. J. Microbiol. Methods, 63, 219-228.
Garcillan-Barcia,M.P., Alvarado,A., de la,C.F., 2011. Identification of bacterial plasmids based on mobility and plasmid population
biology. FEMS Microbiol. Rev., 35, 936-956.
• If two replicons are similar then they tend to be incompatible (not able to stably co-exist in the same bacterium)
• Different Incompatibility groups ≈ different plasmid ’species’
• Currently 27 Inc groups recognized in Enterobacteriaceae by Plasmid Section of the National Collection Type Culture (Colindale, London)
• In practice there are more than 30 Inc groups termed from IncA/C to IncZ and numerous subgroups (IncFI, FII-V, IncX1,-2 etc…)
Narrow host range/ usually encode full conjugation machinery Broad host range/ often mobilizable
IncF (FIA, FIB, FII and others) large, low copy, conjugative IncQ, small, high copy, mobilizable
IncI1 IncA/C large, low copy, conjugative
IncL/M IncN medium, conjugative
IncHI1, IncHI2 IncW
IncB/O IncP
IncX IncR
IncU
Plasmids from different Inc groups differ in their properties
Inc groups most frequently detected in Enterobacteriaceae
β-lactam antibiotics are classified to different families: penicillins,aminopenicillins, cephalosporins, carbapenems and monobactams
They are group of most commonly used antimicrobials in treatment of bacterial infections, especially infections caused by G-negatives from family Enterobacteriaceae
Increasing occurence of resistance to β-lactams in G negative bacteria has become a major problem
bla genes (bla for beta lactam resistance) often reside on transferable plasmids!
Gene β-lacamases encoded (e.g. enzymes degrading the β-lacam antibiotics)
blaTEM
TEM
blaCTX-M
CTX-M
blaSHV
SHV
blaOXA, VIM, IMP, KPC etc.
OXA, VIM, IMP, KPC etc.
ampC (blaCMY, blaDHA ) AmpC (CMY, DHA)
Numerous variants of bla TEM exist that encode corresponding TEM enzymes (these TEM variants are designated with numbers)
TEM-1 is the most commonly encountered β-lactamase in G-negative bacteria (resistance to penicillins, aminopenicillins like ampicillin, amoxycillin)
Mutations in the bla TEM 1 gene may result in enzyme products with Extended Spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs) properties
TEM-15
TEM-1
TEM-17
TEM-135
TEM-19
TEM-106
TEM-20
TEM-15
M182 to T
M182 to T
M182 to T
M104 to K
M238 to S
TEM-52
This figure originates from: Hasman, H., Bergenholtz, R. D., Jørgensen, M. J., Jensen, L. B. & Aarestrup, F. M. ’Global diversity of plasmids carrying the TEM-52 gene’, International Plasmid Biology Conference 2008, Poster presentation.
Because plasmids are transporters for the resistance genes between bacteria and between reservoirs
Are there specific plasmid ’species’ that are responsible for transmission of the bla TEM
genes (or other resistance genes) in enteric bacteria ?
Specifying thus limiting the number of targets [for example divers replicons] increases the chances to find the anti-target approach
Knowing on which platforms the resistance genes are transmitted and on which platforms the evolution of the resistance genes occurs we should be able to model the spread of plasmids and associated resistance genes
predict and prevent the further spread based on such models
Characterization of blaTEM-1 plasmids from Escherichia coli from poultry, cattle, humans (healthy and clinical isolates), pigs
Characterization of blaTEM-52 plasmids (e.g. encoding ESBLs) from Escherichia coli
and Salmonella enterica (isolates from poultry, poultry meet, human infections, broiler meet, beef)
Bielak,E., Bergenholtz,R.D., Jorgensen,M.S., Sorensen,S.J., Hansen,L.H., Hasman,H., 2011. Investigation of diversity of plasmids carrying the blaTEM-52 gene. J. Antimicrob. Chemother., 66, 2465-2474.
IncI1, IncX1 (poultry)
IncFII, IncFIA and IncFIB (all reservoirs)
IncN
IncB/O
IncL/M; IncA/C; IncR
Very similar IncI1 and IncX1 plasmids found both in human and animal reservoirs!
ANALYSIS OF THE RESULTS
Characterize the individual plasmids in the transformants by:
Replicon typing
Size determination (S1-PFGE)
Plasmid purification from transformants and comparison by RFLP
Susceptibility testing on the transformants to assign the resistance conferred by the plasmid etc.
Verify that only the individual plasmid with the feature of interest transferred to the recipient (fx PCR to
confirm the presence of the blaTEM gene or other examined feature; S1-PFGE to see the number of plasmids
in the strains)
Transform plasmids mix into plasmid-free recipient - selection against the given marker on
the plasmid of interest (fx ampicillin to select plasmid encoding TEM-1 enzyme)
Purify plasmids from WTs
Select wild type strains (WTs) with features of interest (fx harbouring blaTEM gene) [Susceptibility test on
WTs, sequencing of genes of interest, PFGE or other strain typing methods to verify the relatedness of WTs]
Bacterial conjugation; http://edwardcrow.deviantart.com
Thank you for attention